Half-blood blues

by Esi Edugyan

Paper Book, 2011

Status

Available

Call number

FIC EDU

Call number

FIC EDU

Description

The aftermath of the fall of Paris, 1940. Hieronymous Falk, a rising star on the cabaret scene, was arrested in a cafe and never heard from again. He was twenty years old. He was a German citizen. And he was black. Fifty years later, Sid, Hiero's bandmate and the only witness that day, is going back to Berlin. Persuaded by his old friend Chip, Sid discovers there's more to the journey than he thought.

Publication

Toronto : Thomas Allen Publishers, [2011]

Original publication date

2011

User reviews

LibraryThing member bcquinnsmom
Half Blood Blues is Esi Edugyan's second novel after The Second Life of Samuel Tyne, written in 2004. The action in Half Blood Blues takes place in Berlin (1939-40 and again in 1992) and Paris between 1939 and 1940, just after the second world war has begun and the Nazis are set to occupy Paris,
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placing it firmly in the Holocaust period. In reading about this novel prior to starting it, I thought it would probably be one of my favorites on the Booker Prize longlist because of its subject matter: jazz (to which I am wholly addicted) and more importantly, the treatment of non-Jewish minorities in the Third Reich. I was more than surprised, and to be honest, a little disappointed after finishing Half Blood Blues, because what I expected and what was actually there were two different things.

There are three storylines here, all of which blend together very well. First, In Berlin in 1939, Sid Griffiths and Chip Jones are members of a jazz group the Hot Time Swingers. Like many African-American jazz musicians of the time, Griffiths and Jones had come to Europe to get out from under the severity of Jim Crow in the U.S., and had done well for themselves. The jazz group had a large following there in the steamy, smoky cabaret life, largely due to a highly-talented young jazz trumpeter named Hieronymous (Hiero) Falk. Hiero was a "Mischling," son of a white woman from the Rhineland who had been raped by an African soldier. When Hitler retook the Rhineland, children like Hiero were labeled as "stateless," and a "cultural stain," even though they were German citizens. The Hot Time Swingers soon discovered that after the Nazis came down on jazz as "degenerate" music, it became very dangerous to play this kind of music in public:

" Jazz. Here in Germany it became something worse than a virus. We was all of us damn fleas, us Negroes and Jews and low-life hoodlums, set on playing that vulgar racket, seducing sweet blond kids into corruption and sex. It wasn't a music, it wasn't a fad. It was a plague sent out by the dread black hordes, engineered by the Jews. Us Negroes, see, we was only half to blame -- we just can't help it. Savages just got a natural feel for filthy rhythms, no self-control to speak of. But the Jews, brother, now they cooked up this jungle music on purpose. All part of their master plan to weaken Aryan youth, corrupt its janes, dilute its bloodstreams."

Going underground, the group took refuge in the Hound Club, which had been shut down by the Nazis for its "degenerate sympathies." The situation is pretty bad by the time Delilah Brown, friend of Louis Armstrong, arrives from Paris and convinces the group that they need to get out of Germany and go to France, where Armstrong was looking forward to meeting them. This begins the second storyline, when eventually Chip, Sid and Hiero make their way to Paris, just ahead of the Nazis, "the boots," who will soon be invading France. There they meet Louis Armstrong, who is quite taken with Hiero's amazing talent. After it becomes clear that the Nazis will soon be entering Paris, the US government tells all non-essential Americans to get out of France and Armstrong leaves. Chip, Sid and Hiero once again go into hiding, and begin a series of recordings, with Hiero in the lead, cutting disc after disc, constantly interrupted by Hiero's frustration over their imperfections. Sid steals one of these discs, hiding it away, and he and the others are left waiting for their exit visas. It is at this time that tragedy befalls Hiero, and he is arrested. Flash forward to 1992, the third segment of this novel. A documentary about the life of the hitherto unknown life and talent of Hiero, whose work has recently been rediscovered, is about to be premiered in Berlin, and Sid and Chip are about to go back after all of this time.

There are some good moments in the novel -- the author's descriptions of the jazz life in Berlin before the Nazis are well done, the stressful atmosphere while the group is in hiding is believable, and the story of the escape from Germany is a bit on the exciting side. And she is quite good at seaming the three strands of the story together to make one cohesive whole. But considering the material listed at the back of the book from which she had ample opportunity to draw together a story of black people during the Nazi period, there's really no depth in this area in the novel, nor are their stories well illustrated here or made representative of through the character of Hiero, much to my great disappointment. A scholar alludes to the fate of both African-Americans caught in Paris and to these "stateless" people as part of the documentary, but as an historian, not as a "Mischling" himself. I thought once things got rolling I'd be seeing more of Hiero's story both pre- and post-arrest, a more personally-driven account. I think the author missed a great and unique opportunity here by not making Hiero more of the centerpiece of her story rather than Sid, whose story focuses more on his on-again/off-again relationship with Chip, his infatuation with Delilah, his own selfish desires, and his petty jealousies. I'd categorize this book as a novel of missed opportunity. Maybe one day, someone will write the book I thought this was going to be. I'll guess I'll just have to keep waiting.
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LibraryThing member writestuff
Hieronymus Falk, Sid Griffiths and Chip Jones are part of a jazz group living in Germany during 1939. It is a dangerous time for blacks in a country where Hitler’s reach is great. They are banned from playing their music, and then an altercation occurs which puts their lives in danger. The group
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flees to Paris and moves in with the beautiful and sultry American singer, Delilah. But war is coming to France as well, and before long jealousy and betrayal coupled with the uncertainty of war leave the group at odds. One morning when Hiero and Sid go out for milk, Hiero is arrested while Sid looks on, and the young and talented jazz musician disappears. Years later, in 1992, Sid and Chip return to Berlin to celebrate the life of Hiero whose early music has been resurrected. Old rivalries and forgotten history resurface as Sid must come to terms with what really happened in Paris so many years ago.

Esi Edugyan’s Booker nominated novel, Half-Blood Blues, is historical fiction which centers around the world of jazz during the years of World War II. Narrated by Sid in a rich dialect of American slang, it moves back and forth from 1939 to 1992, gradually uncovering the complex and conflicting relationships of the characters. Sid and Chip have an uneasy yet lasting friendship which is marred by the day Hiero disappeared. The dialogue between the men is one of mockery and jesting, and is filled with slang which was, at first, a bit distracting for me. The narrative is a reconstruction of a period in time, filled with musical references which evoke a sense of place.

Delilah is the spark which ignites the tension in the novel – a beautiful woman with a seductive personality who has the power to divide loyalties. Edugyan is quite skilled at character development, giving readers a deep look into the lives of her conflicted characters through the unreliable narration of Sid.

Edugyan tackles the themes of racism, antisemitism, betrayal, and love against the backdrop of the Jazz era in Germany. She is adept at conveying a sense of place through gorgeous descriptive phrasing. As Sid and Chip travel to Poland in 1992 in search of Hiero, they climb aboard a bus “yellow as a toilet inside, the seats foamless and reeking of old piss.

No sooner had we sat down than the driver got out, banged shut all the baggage doors, and come back on board glowering. He yelled some words in Polish, but no one seemed to pay no attention. Then he sat down, pulled out some levers, started the old engine with a roar, snapped his dusty window open. The brakes groaned, the axles hissing under us like asps. And then there was a sound like an enormous pressure releasing, and that huge rusted bus started shuddering on its big tires, rolling slowly out into the dead road. – from Half-Blood Blues -

Despite its strengths, the novel is not without its faults. I found the pacing very slow in spots – surprisingly during the part of the book set in 1939 which I thought would have been the most intriguing. Instead, I found myself most enjoying the narrative with Sid and Chip as old men. Although there is supposed to be some mystery to what exactly happened in Paris and with Hiero, I found the tension in the plot to be a bit underwhelming. The use of dialect in the novel is both a strength and a weakness. Early on, I struggled to stay in the story, battling the unfamiliar jargon and slang. Later, I recognized this vernacular as an effective device to understand the characters better. Still, I think the use of language in the book may be difficult for some readers.

There is no doubt that Edugyan can write. Half-Blood Blues is a laudable and quite literary effort that is really about relationships and human flaws. Edugyan uses a volatile time in history as a backdrop to her characters which will appeal to readers of historical fiction who also appreciate literary fiction.
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LibraryThing member kidzdoc
Sid Griffiths is a octogenarian former jazz bassist of modest talent and reputation, who was enjoying the peace of retirement in his home town of Baltimore until an old friend and fellow jazz man, Chip Jones, informs him that they have been invited to Berlin to attend a festival in honor of their
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late friend, the legendary trumpeter Hieronymous Falk. They and several others played together in the Hot-Time Swingers band, which was popular in Berlin in the 1930s until the Nazis deemed that jazz music was a form of degenerate art. As African-Americans, Sid and Chip were also viewed unfavorably by the fascists, but Hiero, born to an African father and a Aryan mother, was despised even more.

By 1939 the band is no longer allowed to perform in Berlin, and the mostly non-Aryan band members find themselves unable to find work. Rescue comes in the form of Delilah Brown, a stunning singer who has been sent from Paris to Berlin by Louis Armstrong to recruit the boys to play in his band. Sid is enraptured by Delilah, but he becomes jealous when she seems to pay more attention to the young Hiero. As the boys are deciding whether or not to go to Paris they find themselves in even more danger, as they fall afoul of local Gestapo agents. They and Delilah are forced undercover, to avoid deportation to concentration camps, as the opportunity to escape progressively dims.

Half Blood Blues was a tedious and painful book to read, due to its use of black vernacular throughout the characters' dialogue and Sid's narration, the often inane and sometimes juvenile conversations between the band members, and the petty jealousies that Sid and Chip displayed throughout the book. The descriptions of the characters' troubles in Berlin and harrowing escape to Paris were gripping, but those were the only portions that I enjoyed. I was very interested in this story of black jazz musicians in Germany and Europe preceding and during World War II, but this was another disappointing novel, one that should never have been included in this year's Booker Prize longlist.
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LibraryThing member edgeworth
For some reason I feel obligated to open this review with a comment about how the Holocaust claimed far more victims than just Jews – notably blacks – but that would be pointless, because despite being about a bunch of black musicians in Nazi Germany, the book barely touches upon Nazi
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perseuction. It’s mostly about jazz, friendship and creative talent (or lack thereof), with Nazi Germany – despite being responsible for the book’s pivotal event – never really becoming more than a historical backdrop.

Half-Blood Blues is narrated by Sidney Griffith, an African-American from Baltimore, who came to Europe with his old friend Chip Jones to seek out a career in Germany’s blossoming jazz scene. Here they met Hieronymous Falk, a half-black German born to a white mother and Senegalese soldier, part of the French army occupying the Rhineland. In the novel’s opening scene, which takes place in occupied Paris in 1940, Sid bears witness to the Nazis hauling Hiero away – and never sees him again.

The book jumps back and forth in chronology, beginning with this scene and then returning to Berlin the previous year, and intersparsed with flashbacks to Sid and Chip’s childhood, and scenes set in 1992 when the two friends – now old and grumpy men – return to Europe to find out what became of Hiero. Most of the novel’s more interesting parts are set in 1939 and 1940, particularly the band’s flight from Germany and their short-lived life in Paris.

This was a very difficult book to get into. This is largely due, I think, to Sid’s first-person narration, which Edugyan renders in phoenetic black slang. At the same time she tries to slip in typical literary metaphors and descriptions, which don’t quite gel with the words of a black jazz musician:

Even awake I was sleeping. Dumped in a foreign city, where I ain’t known hardly a soul, the language a constant door in my face. It weighed on me, the loneliness, the jealousy. I took to avoiding Delilah when I could, eating in strange cafes no gate like to turn up in. I blocked the kid out entire. I ain’t certain he even notice.

The streets of Paris turned white as mould under the cold blare of gas lamps.


Edugyan is certainly capable of some choice turns of phrase, however, like when she describes the swastika as a “dancing black spider” or a bad memory as “a burn in my mind, a darkness at the edge of my thoughts.” It’s a testament to her skills that she could make this kind of language work with her chosen narrative gimmick at all, and towards the end of the novel I had grown accustomed to it. But it was disconcerting for at least the entire first half.

The other reason I found it difficult to get into – aside from my own disinterest in the jazz period – was that the premise didn’t seem to have been executed quite right. Maybe that’s the fault of my own expectations, but there’s surprisingly little in Half-Blood Blues about Nazi persecution of the blacks – or, for that matter, anyone. They only seem like a tangible threat after the war begins and the army is advancing on Paris (easily the best stretch of the novel). Half-Blood Blues is more of a character drama with Nazi Germany as a backdrop – and I can’t fault that, I suppose, given that it’s not half-bad. The novel largely revolves around Hiero’s fate and to what extent Sid was responsible for it. It’s a novel about rivalry and jealousy, and how much more horrible they are when the rival you are jealous of is a close friend and loved one. Sid is well-developed enough as a sympathetic character that even when he does something truly monstrous and selfish you can’t help but feel sorry for him.

This is clearly a novel born out of a passion, the author indulging in her desire to explore the niche period of black German jazz musicians. I can see it taking a different track to what many people might expect, but it’s a good book, and a better one than we should have any right to expect from such an odd subject matter.

BOOKER PREDICTION

Not good enough, alas, to make the shortlist. Half-Blood Blues is an ultimately uneven novel, taking far too long to get moving and having a somewhat truncated emotional resolution. Certainly deserving of its place on the longlist, but not to progress any further. (Although, for the record, still a superior book to The Stranger’s Child.)
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LibraryThing member mrstreme
I always say in my book reviews: When a book can teach me something new about history, then I am a fan. In her highly acclaimed Half Blood Blues, Esi Edugyan taught me a different perspective of World War II - one that incorporates American and German jazz musicians who shared a common love of
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music.

The book is told from the viewpoint of Sid Griffiths, the bass player for an up-and-coming jazz band, The Hot-Time Swingers, who were playing in jazz clubs throughout Berlin. Jazz was hot in pre-World War II Germany, but when Hitler came to power, he considered the music to be "degenerate." This left Sid and his band mates, namely his boyhood friend, Chip, and a black German horn player, Hiero, out of work. The 1939 sections of the story center around the band mates' escape from Germany and their brief time together in Paris.

Fast forward more than 50 years, and the story focuses on elder Sid and Chip, who are returning to Germany for a jazz festival in Hiero's honor. Sid watched Hiero get arrested in Paris, and he assumed Hiero died, but Chip has information that will test Sid's belief. Once they arrive in Berlin, they decide to travel to Poland to learn what happened to Hiero.

Many reviewers found Half Blood Blues to be slow-paced. However, I felt the complete opposite: I was completely riveted by the story, turning pages late into the night. This may be the result of my insatiable curiosity about World War II history, but I have to think that Edugyan's superb writing style also played a part. Another common complaint was the jargon used throughout the dialogues: it was a blend of black vernacular mixed in with 1940's slang. Germans were "boots," women were "janes." It did not bother me too much, but I understand where these critiques are coming from.

For me, Half Blood Blues was the complete package: gripping, humanistic, real. I am pleased that Edugyan has been short listed for the 2012 Orange Prize, and I hope lovers of literary and historical fiction will find their way to this book.
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LibraryThing member 1morechapter
Winner, 2011 Giller Prize
Winner, 2012 Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize
Shortlist, 2011 Man Booker Prize
Shortlist, 2012 Orange Prize
Shortlist, 2011 Governor General’s Award

“It’s like that, I guess, when the past come to collect what you owe.”

Amazing, just look at all those wins and nominations.
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I’m happy for any author that gets that much recognition!

Edugyan’s story is very unique. Black jazz musicians in pre-War World II Germany and France? You’ve got to expect that that didn’t go very well. A story of prejudice, acceptance, betrayal, and friendship, the dichotomies really stood out. I did enjoy the story, but I was tripped up at times with the slang (though I have no doubt it was very close to authentic). Her descriptions of her characters, especially Delilah and Hiero, were very striking. I could easily imagine how they looked and acted. The scene at the end in Paris was also vivid, reminding me a bit of Nemirovsky’s Suite Francaise.

My only real problem with the book was that whenever I put it down, I wasn’t as eager to get back to it as some others I had been reading recently. Not that all the books I read have to ‘zip along’ (ha! – Booker inside joke), but I would hope that I would be drawn in to continue to the end. I was, just not at the level I was expecting.

This was the only Man Booker shortlist title I didn’t read last year because I got it in the mail too late. Where does it fall with those titles? I’ll put it 5th, above Jamrach’s Menagerie. It was also 5th in my Orange shortlist reading, above Song of Achilles.

I would definitely read another by Edugyan at some point.

2011, 352 pp.
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LibraryThing member TinaV95
Library Thing predicted that I would not like "Half Blood Blues"... I'm glad I decided to read it based on comments I'd seen on various threads.

Esi Edugyan tells the compelling story of a group of black jazz musicians from various parts of the world stuck in Berlin (and later Paris) during World
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War II. I am by NO means a history lover, but this fictionalized account opened my eyes to a side of WWII that I had never imagined. The WWII portion of the tale is but one of the time lines the author uses. She also tells the story of the musicians in their older years; all with a focus on betrayal, friendship, memory, secrets, love, etc. **That is all I will say about the plot -- to avoid spoilers.

I have seen some comments about difficulty in reading the dialects of the narrator -- reminiscent of some comments about reading "The Help." I found the opposite true for me, however. The dialect of Sid and the other characters helped paint a very clear picture of each person in the story. Because of the writing I could almost hear each character's voice.

This novel was recently long listed for the "Orange Prize" for fiction. Like some other "oranges", the end left unanswered questions hanging that I wish had been resolved. But, alas... methinks that is why these books are nominated :)
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LibraryThing member Eyejaybee
This book was so nearly great.. The idea was very strong, based around the story of an immensel talented African-German jazz musician who moved to Paris to escape the Nazis but was subsequently arrested following the German occupation, imprisoned and was believed yo have died shortly after his
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release.
Sadly the writing style, designed to replicate the jazz speak of the narrator, bass play Sidney Griffith, became merely exasperating. This book was short listed for the 2011 Booker Prize which suggests that last year must have been a rather thin time for literary fiction!
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LibraryThing member Litfan
This is a novel that deftly explores a lesser-known aspect of the Holocaust: the persecution of Blacks and German “Mischlings” in Germany during World War II. It’s set against the backdrop of the jazz age, which has been effectively shut down in Berlin because the music is seen as
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“degenerate.” The tale is narrated by Sid, and moves back and forth in time to unfold the story of a talented band and its young trumpet player, Hieronymus Falk. The musicians must struggle against the growing danger of Nazism, and each experiences varying degrees of safety in Europe based on their background and citizenship. One of the most endangered is Hiero, a German of mixed race, who is taken by the Nazis one night and never returns. Sid witnesses this, and a major focus of the novel is Sid’s guilt as he grapples with what he did, and did not do, on that night.

The novel gracefully swerves from Paris, to Berlin, to present-day United States, as Sid tells the story both from an immediate perspective, and from the future, looking back. It’s written in a rhythmic, lyrical jazz slang that reads almost like poetry. The prose is at times sharp and laugh-out-loud witty, and at other times raw and chilling. After about 30 pages, I was so hooked on the story I found it difficult to put the book down.

Esi Edugyan has that special something that allows the reader to live in the historical context she’s created, right along with her wonderfully human, flawed characters. She shines a light on what it would be like to live in a world turned upside-down by hate, and explores what the average person would do when caught in an impossible situation in which death could be around every corner. Through it all the musicians continue to cling to their music, the one thing that still makes sense when nothing else does.

This is not a novel where everything is wrapped up tidy and neat. It leaves you wondering, thinking, and somewhat haunted by the characters and their story. Edugyan is an extraordinarily gifted writer with a very unique style and voice. Very highly recommended.
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LibraryThing member LynnB
I love Canada Reads -- especially when it introduces me to a book I would not have otherwise chosen to read. Such is the case with Half Blood Blues -- I'd decided not to read it when I first heard of it, but picked it up when it was shortlisted for Canada Reads. And I loved it!

Ms. Edugyan has given
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us a page-turner of a story. She alternates in time between 1939-40 and 1992, and makes expert use of that technique. I knew the outcomes of some plot elements and gained a deeper appreciation as I learned what was behind them. Other parts of the story remained a mystery until the end. This all contributed to making the story so intriguing!

I loved the character of the narrator, Sid, and what his story says about friendship, loyalty and the longing to be part of something beautiful and lasting.
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LibraryThing member mtrumbo
Flashing back back between the late 1930s/early 1940s and relative present time, this is the story of a group of black jazz muscians in Germany/France during the beginnings of WWII. I thought the author did a great job of taking me to that time period, with the lively language of the characters and
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"descriptions" of the music. My only hesitation of giving five stars, was that I felt a few questions were unanswered in the end. However, still a fab book that I would highly recommend.
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LibraryThing member vivaval
Beautiful and unforgettable.
LibraryThing member phollando
This is a story of the death of jazz at the dawn of Nazism in Germany. The name 'Half-Blood Blues' takes its inspiration from the book's hero and a jazz legend in the making Hieronymous 'Hiero' Falk is just nineteen when he starts playing with the 'Hot Time Swingers' alongside Charles 'Chip Jones
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and Sidney 'Sid' Griffiths, the narrator of the tale. The son of a German woman and a French African brought in to marshal the Rheinland after that part of Germany was ceded to France after the Treaty of Versailles. Hiero is a half-breed or 'mischling'.

The story is set both in the 1940s in Berlin and Paris as the Trio try to stay one step ahead of Hitler's ever advancing army but also in the 1990s in a newly reunited Germany at a concert in Hiero's honour. At the heart of the story is the secret Sid harbours as to how Hiero's fate was sealed.

I didn't expect to enjoy this book and it starts slowly but it is a tale that draws you in. Literary takes on music rarely seem to work but Edugyan is able to render the atmosphere of 1940s jazz, the language of the trio and banter between them feels authentic. The plot is a little weak to sustain the length and the potentially most interesting of the characters, Hiero, is the least well developed but by the end of the book they seem like minor complaints as is the rather random and quite pointless inclusion of Louis Armstrong who makes an appearance. A more major complaint on my behalf is that the list price for this trade paperback is $24.95 which seems like daylight robbery especially since the text is littered with typos and printing errors; if you're going to charge that much then at least earn it with some better proofreading. However I shall not hold the publisher's problems against the author.
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LibraryThing member Schatje
The narrator of the novel is Sid Griffiths, an African-American bassist who played jazz (the music labelled as degenerate by the Nazis) in Berlin in the late 1930s. Other musicians included Chip Jones, an African-American drummer, and Hieronymous (Hiero) Falk, an Afro-German trumpet virtuoso who,
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because he was a "half-breed," was made stateless by the Nazis. The trio escaped to Paris but could not escape the war.

In 1992, Sid, aged 83 and living in Baltimore, is persuaded by Chip to travel to Europe to attend the premiere of a film about Hiero. This trip forces Sid to re-examine the events that led to Hiero's arrest by the Gestapo and his incarceration in a concentration camp.

It soon becomes clear that Sid is not the most reliable of narrators. There is certainly naivete in his less than intense concern for what is happening in Germany; the public persecution of the Jews, the Nazi rallies and general state thuggery receive scant mention. Even a slightly perceptive reader will soon suspect that Sid's version of events cannot be totally trusted. His view of Hiero is jaundiced since he is jealous of his talent and his bond with Delilah Brown, a confidant of Louis Armstrong for whom the trio auditions. Sid's selfishness also makes it difficult for the reader to like him.

The diction is somewhat problematic. Sid narrates using jazz vernacular and period slang. Sid refers to his bass as an axe; people don't walk - they ankle. The repeated use of the article "a" when "an" would be appropriate, I found disconcerting. The word "hell" makes countless appearances in both Sid's dialogue and thoughts. That repetition becomes tiresome despite its purposefulness in developing theme (rather too obviously) and Sid's youthful character, especially when contrasted with his facility with literary metaphors in his mature years.

The publicity for the novel emphasizes that it details the black experience in Nazi Germany, and the book does indeed provide a history lesson. Racism is shown to be an international issue. The impact of the lesson would be more powerful, however, if Hiero's story were developed in more depth. There are many gaps and unexplained mysteries about his past, the revelation of which could have been instructive in terms of theme. As is, the theme that comes across most strongly is that ambition and jealousy can subvert the better qualities in human nature and lead to the betrayal of love and friendship.

This novel has been shortlisted for both the Man Booker Prize and the Scotiabank Giller Prize but I suspect both awards will bypass this nominee.
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LibraryThing member janismack
This book was quite original. You don't often read about black people in Nazi Germany. The author had an interesting writing style and was able to make the music come alive with words. Interesting story.
LibraryThing member otterley
An unusual story, of a half German, half American - half white, half black, part Jewish - jazz band in Europe during the war - the inevitable betrayals and tragedy, the personal relationships and the consequences sixty years later for the survivors. Edugyan narrates the story as a first person
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narrative, in the person of Sid, the not so brilliant bass player and subsequent office worker back home in the States. Switches back and forward in time, and cliffhangers in both past and present, lead us to expect secrets and revelations - and for these to be focused around the fate of Hieronymus Falk, black German and genius trumpeter. And so it turns out.

The settings of the book are interesting and fresh; the plotting a tad predictable and the characterisation a bit thin - Sid is a bit player acting as narrator, and his voice is inconsistent, veering in and out of southern dialect - and the other characters play their parts without leaping off the page. But the book is very readable and engaging, even if it doesn't deliver the knock out emotional punch its subject matter promises.
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LibraryThing member tvordj
In Paris During WWII, a talented young trumpet player was taken by the Nazis. His band member, Sid, watched it happen. over 50 years later, Sid and his oldest friend, Chip, head to Berlin for a music festival celebrating the talent of that young man, Hieronymus Falk who, it seems, didn't die during
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the war after all. The book tells the story of the jazz band members at the beginning of the war years in Berlin and Paris and what happens to them both later at and after the festival when Chip and Sid find Hiero in Poland. The book is told from Sid's point of view and explores themes of jealousy and guilt. None of the characters are particularly likeable but the story is really well told and you feel you're right in the thick of it.
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LibraryThing member Romonko
This book is a deserving winner of the 2011 Giller Prize. It is a book that is beautifully written with lyrical prose, wonderful characters and a subject that isn't well-known by the ordinary reader. The book is set in Europe in 1939 and 1940 before the Second World War. And we also visit 1992 when
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the three main characters are in their eighties and looking back on their life. The three main characters are three men who make up a portion of an early Jazz combo who are playing and cutting records in Berlin when the war overtakes them. Ms. Edugyan has created characters that reach out and grab you. We see all the camaraderie, the treacheries and above all the friendships that are spawned by this turbulent time in world history. There is a dreadful intimacy here as we explore the world through Syd's eyes. The flawed genius of Hiero and his heart-wrenching trumpet playing, the bluster of Chip, the drummer and the sadness of Ernst. He is the combo's manager as well as the clarinet player of the group who sacrifices himself in order to save the three remaining players left after the Gestapo have taken one and one has left on his own after selling out to the Nazi's. I could go on, but won't because this book must be read in order to capture the essence of what Ms. Edugyan is saying. Of course it helps that I am a long-time fan of jazz and of louis Armstrong who also appears in the book.
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LibraryThing member gypsysmom
I was intrigued by this book ever since the Giller Prize longlist came out. I put a library hold on it right away and, as luck would have it, the day after it was announced that Half-Blood Blues had won the 2011 Giller Prize I was notified by the library that the book was waiting for me.

Sid and
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Chip grew up in Baltimore a few blocks from each other. Chip started playing drums at an early age and Sid learned to play stand-up bass. The two of them ended up playing in a jazz band in Berlin and it was a pretty good life before the Nazis decided jazz was decadent. Their trumpeter was Hiero Falk, a young black German. Hiero (or the Kid) is brilliant. He could be the next Louis Armstrong. In fact, Louis Armstrong sent his assistant, Delilah, to Berlin to ask the band to come to Paris to play with him. As we learn right at the beginning of the book Hiero and Sid did make it to Paris but one morning Hiero got picked up by the Nazis. He was sent to a concentration camp and was never heard from again. Until, that is, a filmmaker decided to make a documentary about Hiero and premiered it in Berlin. Then Chip got a letter from Hiero and he asked Chip to come to his home in Poland.

That's the bare bones of the story but the book is so much more. We live through the time the band has to hide in a jazz club because the Nazis were looking for them. My heart was in my mouth when they crossed the border into France. The description of the crowds streaming out of Paris as the Germans entered put me right there in that mass of humanity. I felt like the bus trip across Poland would never end because I so much wanted to know what awaited them at the end. And yet, I deliberately slowed down my reading of the last 20 pages because I really didn't want the book to end. Edugyan writes so beautifully and powerfully. I know she is not old enough to have lived through the times in the book but she writes like she did.

The book truly deserves all the attention it has received. I think I may be buying a copy for a Christmas present.
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LibraryThing member patrickgarson
It took me a while to warm up to Half-Blood Blues, but by its conclusion the novel won me over. Its unique voice and research, excellent characterisation, and a thoughtful, fitting ending elevated it from many of the wan attempts at literature that end up on the Booker longlist.

A long time ago, Sid
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Griffiths played bass in some of the hottest jazz outfits in Weimar Germany. But it all ended in Vichy France when his prodigal friend, Heironymous is carted away by the Gestapo. Years later, he's returning to Berlin, and the trip dredges up memories of smoky, wild clubs, and Sid's guilty conscience with it.

Edugyan has written the novel in a somewhat strange patois. At times, it seems to be an attempt to capture Sid's voice, but when the working-class, never-schooled Sid starts throwing about words like "gloaming", the facade crumbles a bit. Indeed, the melange of heady, very descriptive prose, and a more vernacular, colloquial english is sometimes jarring, but unique. For all that, and I don't know if it grew on me, or it got better but by the end of the novel I was quite comfortable with it.

The stronger part of the book is its characterisation. Edugyan's characters are believable and fleshed out to just the right degree. Just as with real people, the view is imperfect and not every motivation is clear, but the hopes, fears and dreams propelling these people are never less than credible. Further, the characters are likable and relatable - even the bad ones.

Finally, and most impressively, Edugyan isn't afraid to finish the book on a subtle, powerful note, rather than serving up easy closure or disappointment. The novel stayed with me after as a consequence of that, and I look forward to more by her.
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LibraryThing member Gary10
I warmed to this book as I got into it. The novely of thinking about how jazz musicians were treated in pre and post Nazi Germany was interesting--espeically given how reverent Germans come to be when it comes to jazz. Also enjoyed the references to actual Jazz legends. A few of the plot twists
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seemed unlikely and this was a bit of a distraction, but overall, enjoyed the read.
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LibraryThing member infjsarah
This was just OK. It was an interesting time to read about and about an aspect of history I knew nothing about. But I felt there was a much better book lurking in here somewhere. I didn't like the characters and they were mostly very flat. And the explanation for what happened to Hiero as a 1 page
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dream at the end - What?!! Seriously!!
Not me, I'm afraid.
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LibraryThing member wortklauberlein
Suspenseful story of two American jazz musicians in prewar Europe took a little getting used to because of the intriguing but odd dialect -- a mix of American slang and musician-speak as translated by the rather unreliable narrator from the German this mixed combo spoke.

Like complex music, this
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novel might require another listen before the reader can make sense of what really happened to the rising young star in the group. I'd also like to learn more about the horrifying human zoo in Hamburg, and about Louis Armstrong's presence in France in those volatile years.
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LibraryThing member kmaziarz
Edugyan’s Booker Prize shortlisted novel evokes Berlin and Paris during World War II through the eyes of a rag-tag bunch of jazz musicians looking for their big break. Having achieved some limited notoriety in Berlin during the Weimar era, the Hot-Time Swingers—two black ex-pat Americans, a
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Jewish pianist, and a couple of Germans, one of whom is black himself—are now struggling to stay alive in a Berlin that has turned against jazz and turned against half-breeds, or mischlings, Jews, and black people of all nationalities. When a jazz singer from America shows up to find them with word that she represents Louis Armstrong, the band thinks their fortunes are made. But first, they have to get from Berlin to Paris—and not all of them are going to make it. Eventually hitting Paris just in time for the Occupation to catch up with them, the group has to keep their heads down even further while at the same time trying to cut a record—the Half-Blood Blues, an anthem rejecting everything Nazis stand for. But it’s only a matter of time before the Boots—the Gestapo—catch up with them.

Cutting between 1940 and 1992, Half-Blood Blues is a story of race, friendship, secrets, and betrayal. Showing a side of World War II not often written about—that is, the story of the other, non-Jewish ethnic groups persecuted by the Reich—it is fascinating and textured.
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LibraryThing member SamSattler
By the time I finally picked up a copy of Half-Blood Blues, Esi Edugyan’s novel already had quite a reputation going for it, the result of having won Canada’s Giller prize and having been a short-listed candidate for Britain’s Booker Prize. I am happy to report that this story of three black
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jazz musicians, who find themselves trapped in Paris when Hitler’s Nazis overrun the city, largely lives up to that reputation – except for a quibble or two I will mention later.

Sid Griffiths and Chip Jones have known each other forever. The two grew up together in Baltimore where they honed their musical talents to so a high level - Sid on base and Chip on drums - that they would become popular in Berlin as the core of a jazz band they called the Hot-Time Swingers. But they really hit the big time when they add trumpeter Hieronymous Falk to the mix. Hiero, a mixed-race German, is so special a talent that he catches the attention of one Louis Armstrong - who invites the band to join him in Paris to cut a record.

The tough decision to shut things down in Berlin is made easy for the band when Hitler labels jazz as “degenerate music” and bans public performances of it. When the Hot Swingers, including its German members, realize that more than their mere livelihood is at stake, the scramble is on to find papers good enough to get them across the border and on their way to Paris. Little do they know, that Hitler’s army is not all that far behind them.

Sid Griffiths, the book’s narrator, tells this intriguing story from the perspective of just over fifty years in the future. Sid and Chip are old men living in 1992 Baltimore with plans to attend the imminent Berlin debut of a documentary film honoring the now legendary jazz trumpeter Hiero Falk. Hiero, caught in a Nazi roundup of “undesirables,” has not been heard from since the day of his arrest and is presumed to have died in a Nazi death camp. The mystery surrounding his end, details of which only Sid knows, have turned Hiero into the kind of musical legend that only dying young can do for a musician.

But Sid knows the whole story, and even though the truth is still eating at his soul, he does not really expect, or want, to go public with it. Surprise, surprise, Sid.

Esi Edugyan has Sid speak in the vernacular of jazz musicians of the thirties. While this initially slows the reader down, once the speech pattern becomes familiar, this technique gives Half-Blood Blues a feeling of authenticity it otherwise would not have had. This does, however, bring me to my first “quibble.” When Sid is thinking out loud for the reader, he sounds nothing like he does in conversation with his friends - even in 1992 – and that is sometimes a little jarring to the reader’s ear.

But more importantly, the book’s ending does not quite measure up to the hugely dramatic build-up leading to it. Perhaps unrealistically, I was hoping for more. I did very much enjoy this one, and I suspect that I will be thinking about it for a good while, so if you like WWII history from a civilian point-of-view, you will likely love Half-Blood Blues. Esi Edugyan is most certainly a talent to watch.

Rated at: 4.0
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ISBN

9780887627415
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